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Word Meanings - FADY - Book Publishers vocabulary database

Faded. Shenstone.

Related words: (words related to FADY)

  • FADAISE
    A vapid or meaningless remark; a commonplace; nonsense.
  • FADGE
    To fit; to suit; to agree. They shall be made, spite of antipathy, to fadge together. Milton. Well, Sir, how fadges the new design Wycherley. (more info) unit, G. fügen, or AS. afægian to depict; all perh. form the same
  • FADED
    That has lost freshness, color, or brightness; grown dim. "His faded cheek." Milton. Where the faded moon Made a dim silver twilight. Keats.
  • FADY
    Faded. Shenstone.
  • FADER
    Father. Chaucer.
  • FADME
    A fathom. Chaucer.
  • FADELESS
    Not liable to fade; unfading.
  • FADING
    Losing freshness, color, brightness, or vigor. -- n.
  • FADDLE
    To trifle; to toy. -- v. t.
  • FAD
    A hobby ; freak; whim. -- Fad"dist, n. It is your favorite fad to draw plans. G. Eliot.
  • FADEDLY
    In a faded manner. A dull room fadedly furnished. Dickens.
  • FADE
    Weak; insipid; tasteless; commonplace. "Passages that are somewhat fade." Jeffrey. His masculine taste gave him a sense of something fade and ludicrous. De Quincey.
  • FIDDLE-FADDLE
    A trifle; trifling talk; nonsense. Spectator.

 

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